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[Andrea Zittel: "Wagon Station Encampment"]
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[WOMAN #1] I've only been here for about a
week,
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but I would like to spend two.
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I think that would be a really good amount
of time.
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A lot of my own work kind of corresponds with
landscapes.
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This is kind of a research activity for me.
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Everybody comes out to the desert for different
reasons.
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Historically, that's always been true.
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There's situations where the group will all
go on a hike or something,
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or cook dinner together.
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But then, people kind of hang out in their
pods,
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which is what is so cool about the way that
the wagon stations have been designed.
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You can have that private time
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without it seeming like you're defecting from
the group or something.
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[LAUGHING]
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[WOMAN #2] Somebody please enjoy that!
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[WOMAN #1] I would love to eat that.
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[WOMAN #2] Do you want to just claim it?
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[WOMAN #1] Sure.
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[WOMAN #2] I also have an onion and apples.
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[WOMAN #3] And I'm totally jealous... [LAUGHS]
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I think it's such a brilliant idea in the
way she's used the space.
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I also think it's a really interesting model.
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It's a private residence--
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it's not an official residency, per se.
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But she opens it up twice a year to let people
come.
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And it's a, I think, a really progressive
way of having
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artists and creative people work together
and meet--
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with a no-pressure environment, too.
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[WOMAN #1] I did a lot of hiking,
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and I did some filming,
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and some reading.
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Yeah, and then I'm working on a journal, as
well.
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So, Andrea was very generous in talking to
me about that.
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[WOMAN #2] Generosity doesn't happen that
often
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with regard to land these days,
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so I think that's really radical.
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[ZITTEL] Okay, so the new problem
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is that the paper gets stuck under the letters.
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I'm so drawn to the frontier mentality
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and that idea of having to figure everything
out from scratch.
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There have been two generations of wagon stations.
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In the first generation, I essentially gave
to friends
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and people who I collaborated with
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who would come out here and stay for periods
of time.
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But, it was always the same person visiting
each wagon station,
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and they would customize them.
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In those instances, each wagon station was
autonomous
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and it would have its own camp stove within
it.
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Then, at a point, we extracted those
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because they were starting to fall apart in
the elements.
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And they've sort of traveled to exhibitions
since then.
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And with these, we've made them all...
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Like, they're all sort of the standard version,
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like, the way I designed them.
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[WOMAN #3] There's locks on either side for
this to open up.
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And, there's like little strings up there
to put your clothes on.
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There's also a door in the back that locks,
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so if you need any extra air, it's just a
quick way out.
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And you can leave it open when you sleep.
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It gets a little cold, though, so I usually
close it.
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And, there's a shelf for everything that you
need.
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And that's pretty much it!
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[WOMAN #2] I watched the full moon arc across
the entire sky
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over the course of the evening.
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You're inside, and you can see the environment
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framed by Andrea's designs,
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really consciously and intentionally.
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[ZITTEL] Now, we have the communal kitchen,
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and the outdoor showers,
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and the composting toilets.
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This is a sort of communal living situation
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that only works because it's a certain amount
of time
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and we send people all of these protocol sheets
out before they come.
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Okay, so if you want to follow Dean and do
that on every one--
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the double layer.
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And, if you want, you could take that, too,
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and then just put a like little edge four
inches in.
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I think that the Wagon Station Encampment
was sort of
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slowly walking into a situation of inviting
other people to come be here.
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We always say it's sort of a cross between
a retreat and a residency
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and a normal campground.
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It would be redundant to create, like,
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another art residency when there's so many
of them.
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Everybody has their desert fantasy.
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And so my particular fantasy was probably
living on an alien landscape.
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When NASA tests habitation on Mars,
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they have a station in the Mojave Desert,
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and I always thought that was so interesting,
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that this is the landscape that was chosen
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to be most representative of another planet.
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I think the aesthetic of these was, sort of,
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a sci-fi pioneer aesthetic.
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And I don't know if that's my aesthetic now,
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because it's constantly changing.
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My great grandparents were pioneers just south
of here,
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and they settled in the Imperial Valley.
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The temperatures in the Imperial Valley
are about ten degrees hotter than here--
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and this gets pretty hot.
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When I feel like complaining, I keep thinking
about them.
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They would live in a tent,
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and I guess they poured water over the
tent
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to cool things off.
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It's so funny, I get upset when people say there's nothing here.
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[ZITTEL] Okay!
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[WOMAN #2] Thank you so much!
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[ZITTEL] Sure.
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[WOMAN #2] It was really magical and inspiring
and awesome.
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[ZITTEL] It was good to meet you.
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[WOMAN #2] You too, and what an honor.
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[ZITTEL] Bye!
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[WOMAN #3] It was really nice to meet you.
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Thank you so much.
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It was awesome.
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[ZITTEL] Have a good trip! Bye!
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[ZITTEL] But, there's something about the
space
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that I think really calls to people who want
to try
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and invent their own structures for living.